forget truth that lacks lyricism.

Ask me anything   Submit   Carolyn, 24, museum employee and part-time knitting enthusiast.

curate:

Liam Gillick, “The State Itself Becomes A Super Whatnot” MoMA NYC via: stay-abstract : visual-poetry

curate:

Liam Gillick, “The State Itself Becomes A Super Whatnot” MoMA NYC via: stay-abstract : visual-poetry

— 21 hours ago with 168 notes
cavetocanvas:

Gustave Moreau, Galatea, c. 1880
From the Musée d’Orsay:

The subject of this painting has been taken from the 12th fable of Book XIII in Ovid’s Metamorphoseswhich tells the story of the Cyclops Polyphemus’ jealousy over Galatea’s love for the shepherd Acis. Gustave Moreau’s interest in the theme was revealed by two photographs that he hung in his dining room: one of Raphael’s Triumph of Galatea and the other of Sebastiano del Piombo’s Polyphemus. Here, far from illustrating the story, Moreau has gone no further than the first line: “Here is a terrible giant who loves a beautiful nymph”. He gives a personal, modern, magical interpretation of the pagan myth, rejecting the anecdotal and concentrating on the opposition between exquisite beauty and hideous ugliness, beauty and the beast, love and disdain. His composition stages a struggle between shadow and light, mineral and liquid, good and evil. Moreau’s Polyphemus is nevertheless not an ogre, but a melancholy being, lost in one-eyed contemplation of the inaccessible woman. Galatea, who has taken refuge in a cave too narrow for the giant to enter, is a pearl gleaming in its setting. The change in scale between the two figures is repeated between Galatea and the tiny nereids almost invisible in the lacework of aquatic plants and coral… This vegetation looks supernatural but was derived from drawings meticulously copied from a book of marine botany in the Museum d’Histoire Naturelle, where Moreau had registered as an unofficial student in 1879. The rubbed, scratched texture of the oil paint gives the work a precious, enamelled look. The Salon of 1880 was the last in which Moreau took part. Galatea was a triumph there and marked the height of his career.

cavetocanvas:

Gustave Moreau, Galatea, c. 1880

From the Musée d’Orsay:

The subject of this painting has been taken from the 12th fable of Book XIII in Ovid’s Metamorphoseswhich tells the story of the Cyclops Polyphemus’ jealousy over Galatea’s love for the shepherd Acis. Gustave Moreau’s interest in the theme was revealed by two photographs that he hung in his dining room: one of Raphael’s Triumph of Galatea and the other of Sebastiano del Piombo’s PolyphemusHere, far from illustrating the story, Moreau has gone no further than the first line: “Here is a terrible giant who loves a beautiful nymph”. He gives a personal, modern, magical interpretation of the pagan myth, rejecting the anecdotal and concentrating on the opposition between exquisite beauty and hideous ugliness, beauty and the beast, love and disdain. His composition stages a struggle between shadow and light, mineral and liquid, good and evil. Moreau’s Polyphemus is nevertheless not an ogre, but a melancholy being, lost in one-eyed contemplation of the inaccessible woman. Galatea, who has taken refuge in a cave too narrow for the giant to enter, is a pearl gleaming in its setting. The change in scale between the two figures is repeated between Galatea and the tiny nereids almost invisible in the lacework of aquatic plants and coral… This vegetation looks supernatural but was derived from drawings meticulously copied from a book of marine botany in the Museum d’Histoire Naturelle, where Moreau had registered as an unofficial student in 1879. The rubbed, scratched texture of the oil paint gives the work a precious, enamelled look. The Salon of 1880 was the last in which Moreau took part. Galatea was a triumph there and marked the height of his career.

— 21 hours ago with 144 notes
sfmoma:

In honor of Friday the 13th:

Richard Avedon, “Boyd Fortin, Thirteen Year Old Rattlesnake Skinner, Sweetwater, TX, March 10, 1979” (1979) | photograph | gelatin silver print


(via SFMOMA)

sfmoma:

In honor of Friday the 13th:

Richard Avedon, “Boyd Fortin, Thirteen Year Old Rattlesnake Skinner, Sweetwater, TX, March 10, 1979” (1979) | photograph | gelatin silver print


(via SFMOMA)

— 2 weeks ago with 266 notes
joshdee:

softcoeur:

Decided today that if there’s a hell (there’s not), this is what it looks like.

Hardest decision of my life

 My. Life.

joshdee:

softcoeur:

Decided today that if there’s a hell (there’s not), this is what it looks like.

Hardest decision of my life

 My. Life.

— 2 weeks ago with 63 notes
okhairy:

tomorrowishidden:

Ohh, Paul. This photo is everything.

> Yum.

okhairy:

tomorrowishidden:

Ohh, Paul. This photo is everything.

> Yum.

(via beardedmeninknittedthings)

— 2 weeks ago with 33 notes
New glasses + new necklace with old NYC train token + stupid face + shower curtain = this picture.

New glasses + new necklace with old NYC train token + stupid face + shower curtain = this picture.

— 2 weeks ago
Sam Falls, Phenomenological Ontology, 22 X 30 inches, 2008

Sam Falls, Phenomenological Ontology, 22 X 30 inches, 2008

— 3 weeks ago
Ordered myself a pair of these babies from Warby Parker. Should get them in the next week or so, I’m very excited! I got my last pair of glasses in January of 2007 so I’m due for some new cute ones.

Ordered myself a pair of these babies from Warby Parker. Should get them in the next week or so, I’m very excited! I got my last pair of glasses in January of 2007 so I’m due for some new cute ones.

— 3 weeks ago with 1 note
cavetocanvas:

Anselm Kiefer, Margarete, 1981

cavetocanvas:

Anselm Kiefer, Margarete, 1981

— 3 weeks ago with 80 notes
Finished mittens :)

Finished mittens :)

— 4 weeks ago with 2 notes